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  Waite, Davis H.
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationPeople's Party (Populist)  
  1892-01-01  
 
NameDavis H. Waite
Address
Aspen, Colorado , United States
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born April 09, 1825
DiedNovember 27, 1901 (76 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedBrentinCO
Dec 15, 2022 01:30pm
Tags
InfoPolitical Career

The gubernatorial election of 1892 ushered in Colorado's populist experiment under the leadership of Davis Hanson Waite. Waite and his family moved to Leadville, Colorado, in 1879 to practice law. With the death of his spouse, Waite and two children moved to Aspen, Colorado. Before his governorship Waite was involved with numerous journalistic projects like the Aspen Union Era, became Pitkin County's first superintendent of schools, and served as the county's Justice of the Peace. Politically, Waite was the chairman of the Pitkin County Central Committee, secretary of the Knights of Labor Assembly, and a delegate to both the St. Louis and Omaha Populist conventions.

Governor

As governor, Waite was able to influence legislation and the political mainstream with his populist vision as espoused in his famous "Bloody Bridles" speech. Waite's main battle was with those he saw as possessing a monopoly over the common man. As such Waite supported bi-metallism and was against any form of federalized banking that he saw as benefiting a monopoly entrenched aristocracy. His tireless attacks continued against the railroad monopolies that were acquiring huge federally subsidized land grants, and often took advantage of their industrialized labor force. Despite his actions in the Cripple Creek Strike and correspondence with Eugene V. Debs during the Pullman Strike, Waite was opposed to socialism. Waite was also instrumental in passing the legislation that gave women the right to vote in Colorado, but after his gubernatorial loss in 1894 he reversed his opinion of women's suffrage.

After his defeat Waite spent much of his time with speaking engagements that passionately supported the Omaha Populist Party Platform and continued his journalistic endeavors in periodicals like Our Nation's Crisis.

On November 27, 1901, Davis Hanson Waite died in his Aspen home while peeling apples for Thanksgiving dinner.

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RACES
  11/03/1896 CO Governor Lost 1.78% (-44.44%)
  11/06/1894 CO Governor Lost 41.06% (-10.89%)
  11/08/1892 CO Governor Won 46.68% (+4.88%)
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